The site — unveiled on Dec. 6 and called “Love One Another: A Discussion on Same-Sex Attraction” — includes video clips of Mormon leaders as well as gay members and their families promoting compassion and understanding toward homosexuals, and encouraging everyone to be “disciples of Christ.”

“Our hope with this site is that empathy will grow in families,” LDS apostle D. Todd Christofferson says in one clip. “We’re trying to communicate that our love is inclusive, that we want to have the family remain intact, and the relationships we’ve treasured over the years to remain and to grow.”

It’s important, the apostle says, “to recognize the feelings of a person, that they are real, that they are authentic, that we don’t deny that someone feels a certain way.”

“This website is a tool, or resource, for LDS faithful for engaging in this topic,” says Brandie Balkan, executive director of Equality Utah, a gay rights group. “It is important that the core is inclusion, understanding and compassion. It is my hope that we will see a difference in the lived experience of the LGBT [community], especially of our young people.”

Mormon leaders have increasingly emphasized that Mormons not abandon or distance themselves from gay loved ones and have condemned bullying and homophobic rhetoric among members and in society at large.

The new site thrills newly elected state Sen. Jim Dabakis — Utah’s Democratic Party boss, a onetime Mormon missionary and soon to be the only openly gay person in the state Legislature.

Laurie Campbell, who tells her story on the site, was nervous to participate but felt it would be a valuable gift to her fellow believers.

Campbell, of Boulder City, Nev., always knew she was a lesbian growing up in her Mormon family. She had three successive gay relationships, but, finally, decided to give up her partner and return to her faith. She subsequently married a man and had three children. More than 20 years ago, she wrote about the experience in a book called, "Born That Way? A True Story of Overcoming Same-Sex Attraction With Insights for Friends, Families and Leaders."

Campbell used a pseudonym for that book, but is herself on the video.

“It was unnerving to come forward and be open about it — even not living a gay relationship now, that still doesn’t go over very well in the church,” she said in a phone interview. “But I don’t want people to feel ashamed if they identify as gay.”

The fact that the new LDS site uses people who identify as gay, she says, sends a “message of acceptance. I love that.”

“Same-sex attraction is not a sin,” the website emphasizes, “but acting on it is.” Mormon doctrine decrees that sex should only be between a husband and a wife.

“It’s no sin to have inclinations that if yielded to would produce behavior that would be a transgression,” apostle Dallin H. Oaks says in an interview posted on the church’s newsroom website. “The sin is in yielding to temptation. Temptation is not unique. Even the Savior was tempted.”

On the question of inborn tendencies, Oaks says, “the church does not have a position on the causes of any of these susceptibilities or inclinations, including those related to same-gender attraction.”

Same-sex attraction is also “not an illness or a disease,” LDS officials say in the new videos, noting that the church no longer encourages gay members to get married to someone of the opposite sex.

“On this website we witness something that church leaders rarely do: Admit that we’ve done things wrong in the past,” Spencer W. Clark, executive director of Mormons for Marriage Equality, says in a statement.

The new site also doesn’t encourage Latter-day Saints to oppose legislation making gay marriage legal. Indeed, Dabakis notes the fact that the church “didn’t get involved in any of the four races [gay marriage initiatives] that were on the (November) ballot — not one volunteer, not one dollar — is evidence of this kind of change, and our community has changed dramatically, too.”

The new website has been in the works for more than two years, LDS church spokesman Michael Purdy says in an introduction, and was prompted by misunderstanding of Mormonism during the recent presidential election.

“Too often these types of big, important issues are dealt with in sound bites,” Purdy says, “and often by individuals who do not have the complete picture of what the church is doing.”

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